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May 11, 2026
This week’s theme
Whose what?

This week’s words
cat's meow

cat's meow
Three Cats Singing, 1925/1939
Art: Louis Wain

Previous week’s theme
Words to describe people

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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

Possession is nine-tenths of the law, but in English it’s also a fertile source of idioms. Crow’s feet, for example, do not constitute evidence of birds tiptoeing across your face even though they are wrinkles around your eyes.

This week we feature five terms that answer the question: Whose what? Each is a possessive phrase in the format X’s Y. We’ll meet a cat, a patriarch, a rake, a pig, and a parson.

As you’ll see below, the cat’s ___ is already filled in. Stay tuned to discover the same for the rest of this week’s cast.

cat’s meow

PRONUNCIATION:
(CATS mee-OW)

MEANING:
noun: Something or someone excellent.

ETYMOLOGY:
From cat, from Old English catt + meow (the cry of a cat), of imitative origin. Earliest documented use: 1921.

NOTES:
The term is strongly associated with the slangy exuberance of the 1920s and the Jazz Age. In that era, American English had a fad for playful animal phrases meaning something excellent: cat’s pajamas, cat’s whiskers, bee’s knees, and so on. Today’s term belongs to that same litter.

USAGE:
“‘My mom truly believed that my brother was the king and the cat’s meow,’ Lam said in an interview. ‘She truly embodied that sons and boys were put on a pedestal.’”
Nathan Griffiths; ‘Biased’ Will That Left $2.9m to Son Overruled in BC; Daughter Inherited $170,000; Calgary Herald (Canada); Sep 18, 2024.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The difference between false memories and true ones is the same as for jewels: it is always the false ones that look the most real, the most brilliant. -Salvador Dali, painter (11 May 1904-1989)

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